It seems like Bigfoot Killer, the family hardware-accelerated latency-chopping network controllers is really taking off after garnering interest from the motherboard industry. First, it was MSI announcing a strategic partnership with Bigfoot to bundle NICs using Killer 2100 and the probability of integrating it onto its motherboards, then Gigabyte beating MSI to that by unveiling not one, but three LGA1366 motherboards under the G1.Killer series with integrated Killer controllers, that leaves us with ASUS.

ASUS' first encounter with the Killer NIC is in the form of a multifunction addon card called ASUS ThunderBolt. Multifunction addon cards aren't new to ASUS. Recently, it released U3S6, a card that integrates USB 3.0 and SATA 6 Gb/s controllers with two ports of each kind. The ThunderBolt, on the other hand, integrates Bigfoot Killer 2100 network controller and ASUS Xonar sound. So in one package, it gives gamers access to a more responsive network and clearer audio.

The ASUS ThunderBolt is a PCI-Express addon card, integrating a Killer 2100 controller with its own dedicated memory; and in probability, an ASUS AV100 audio chipset found on low-profile ASUS Xonar sound cards such as Xonar DS. It provides 7.1 channel audio out with over 100 dBA SNR, and packs software that emulates popular positional-audio technologies such as EAX, and various Dolby/DTS mojo. The card draws power from a 4-pin Molex connector. The entire card is covered by an EMI shield, which also gives it a nice "product" feel.

To begin with, ASUS will bundle the ThunderBolt with its new upcoming LGA1366 motherboard, the Rampage III Black Edition. In the near future, it may also sell the card separately.

id rather just see killer NIC integrated motherboards. Forgive me, but, what are the benefits from using Killer 2100 over say a good Intel 1 Gb/s card?

Click to expand...

The benefits is that you can control every single application running on Your computer that uses any kind of internet bandwidth, you can also change alot of other stuff that you havent seen at all on a intel built-in NIC, also you can make it so it prio the gaming. That normally means lower response time and better ping in games.

The benefits is that you can control every single application running on Your computer that uses any kind of internet bandwidth, you can also change alot of other stuff that you havent seen at all on a intel built-in NIC, also you can make it so it prio the gaming. That normally means lower response time and better ping in games.

Click to expand...

Yes but every review I've ever read about a bigfoot "killer" nic has shown that the offloading of the net bandwidth from the cpu has no gain in performance in any game and there is no measurable gain in response time or ping.

The only benefit these have like posted above is on a software level where you can manually set priorities to applications, ie dividing net bandwidth for gaming while downloading....

Why is this Killer NIC suddenly appearing on things? They've been around at least a couple of years, and always been known to make next to zero improvement. I imagine this could lose companies more sales than it'll get them due to people who don't want to spend extra on something that's nearly pointless.

Edit: Though not so much with this, seeing as it's just bundled in with the main event.

Two notes. This is going to have some of the worst reviews in newegg history (driver related). And now why on earth does this need a molex? The killer draws under 10 watts, the soundcard part should be similar.

The benefits is that you can control every single application running on Your computer that uses any kind of internet bandwidth, you can also change alot of other stuff that you havent seen at all on a intel built-in NIC, also you can make it so it prio the gaming. That normally means lower response time and better ping in games.

Click to expand...

that only works if you are the only PC on the network (direct to modem)

thats so damn rare these days (everyone shares behind a router) that its worthless. killer NIC cant control the traffic from other systems to prioritise your gaming packets over someone elses.

The benefits is that you can control every single application running on Your computer that uses any kind of internet bandwidth, you can also change alot of other stuff that you havent seen at all on a intel built-in NIC, also you can make it so it prio the gaming. That normally means lower response time and better ping in games.

Click to expand...

id agree but I believe tha you can do this on addon intel cards. You can also distribute resources through your router, seems rather pointless of a card at the price point they are selling them at vs. the competition.

Extinct eh? I think you mean integrated into nvidia drivers. Perhaps the GTX 680 will have a network jack.

Click to expand...

No, I mean the ADD-IN physx card that you put into a slot just to get PhysX physics. Integrated physx on a video card is very understandable. But, an NIC on a sound card, that sounds a little weird. If it was built into the mobo without compromising too much space and while keeping the cost reasonable like others have said, then I would see no problem with it.